Tag: Ted Gunderson

In the year 2000, just before my wife was about to give birth to our first child, she became obsessed with the numbers 11:11. We ended up buying a house in Woodstock, and the fact the street address was 11 was very important to her.

Twice a day, my wife would remind me whenever the clock hit 11:11. She told me there was something very important about 11:11, although I thought she was just joking around. Since I played a major role in spreading 420 around the globe, I assumed my wife wanted to get in on some numerology of her own. But then, I always thought my wife was psychic, although it was nearly impossible for her to channel those energies, she just had to accept whatever insights came down the pike.

Imagine my surprise, when on September 11, 2001, American Airlines flight 11 hit the World Trade Center, which just happens to look like a giant 11. So it was really a case of 11.11.11.

Can this really be an accident? Probably. The most important factors in picking flights involved surveillance cameras and other security measures, not flight numbers. But we will likely never know whether or not the perpetrators deployed this numerology as a psychic bridge between the appearance of the towers and the terrible trauma.

But this is the way the mind works, especially when under stress. And that’s why dark magic can be so effective.

Most authors in conspiracy research, knowingly or unknowingly, are victims of disinfo on some levels. Early on, I published articles by Mike Ruppert and Alex Constantine, but after working with both for a few years, I came to the sad conclusion they were both likely professional disinfo artists. It just shows you what a minefield conspiracy research really is, and how easy it can be to lead people down a garden path if you have more facts than the average person at your disposal.

The Most Dangerous Book in the World, a book written by a member of the neo-conservative movement, S.K. Bain, asserts that 9/11 was orchestrated around the elements of Aleister Crowley’s theories on magic. This is the same path being trod currently by Mark Passio. If you don’t understand how intel manufactures the Tin Foil Hat Patrol, you only have to read the dozens of rave reviews posted on Amazon concerning an obviously absurd book with near zero basis in reality.

There’s no doubt Crowley was interesting: a great mountain climber, respected poet, from a distinguished family, and he experimented with drugs long before most people knew what they were. Crowley was obsessed with uncovering the science behind magic, but much of his work seems dated these days. And he was also a willing agent of British intelligence. His foray into a German secret society (OTO), which he later took over, reminds me greatly of a German military intelligence officer’s foray into a rightwing occult-based party, which he took over. I am speaking, of course, of Herr Hitler. In this regard, these two could be viewed as the grandmaster black magicians of their time, locked in combat on the astral plane. Somehow, I suspect Rudolf Hess’s flight to Scotland involved their magical confrontations.

Crowley’s primary legacy today could be Scientology, a mind control op constructed after the founder, L. Ron Hubbard, got involved with Crowley’s OTO lodge in California led by rocket scientist Jack Parsons.

But then all religions are someone’s mind control op. Did you know the Mormon faith may have been invented to sweep up Freemasons who were abandoning that culture after fear swept through their temples that the British were secretly manipulating masonry? The Mormon rituals are just updates on the Mason rituals. So who’s magic is more powerful, the Freemasons, the Mormons, Crowley or the Nazis?

When the Franklin Savings and Loan scandal erupted and threatened to spread a cancer into the highest levels of government, former FBI agent Ted Gunderson was brought in for damage control. Gunderson soon began spreading the story that millions of Satanists were part of a secret network of evil and they were routinely brainwashing and abusing our children.

The sad reality is this Satanist story was likely invented and spread as a rabbit hole. Sure there are plenty of evil Satanists in the world, although to be a Satanist you first have to believe in Christianity or something like it. Despite decades of investigation, however, not a single Satanist crime cell has ever been uncovered. More often, innocent victims have been branded as Satanists because they dress in black or listen to Metallica or like group sex. At least, that’s what happened in West Memphis. If you want to see some magic in action, check out children’s TV programming. You’ll find loads of dark magic almost everywhere you look.

When it comes to conspiracy research, however, I’ve always trusted my instincts. And my instincts tell me the attempt to run the 9/11 story into an Aleister Crowley ritual event will never result in any useful information about anything.

Yes, 9/11 was a magic ritual designed to sweep America into war and cover the electronic transfer of billions of dollars at the same time.

That’s the real story.

But if you start looking for acolytes of Aleister Crowley as being the brains or motivation behind the event, I’m afraid that search may not be any more fruitful than Gunderson’s widespread Satanic investigations, none of which resulted in a single arrest or even uncovered a single cell of criminals.

You see, blaming an intelligence agent like Aleister Crowley for most of the evil in the world simply doesn’t pass the muster of my instincts.

Twist one way to make a conservative, and twist the other to make a liberal.

Put both into a crowded environment with limited resources. Sell propaganda masked as enlightenment, and anything else one side might desire to fight the other.

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